I've been handed a project that involves creating a SOAP API call to Lufthansa's myIdTravel API. (Including the Lufthansa company name here in case anyone with specific experience with the Lufthansa API can jump in. All the API information is public knowledge, and I have obfuscated any private info, like "password".)
While I have plenty of ReST API experience using OAuth2, I have no SOAP experience at all, and I am finding the experience quite frustrating.
I was provided, by Lufthansa, a client.pfx file, and the following example SOAP XML body:
<soapenv:Envelope xmlns:soapenv="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/"
xmlns:ser="http://service.login.myidtravel.com"
xmlns:bos="http://bos.login.myidtravel.com"
xmlns:ser1="http://service.wsgateway-v2.myidtravel.lhsystems.com">
<soapenv:Header/>
<soapenv:Body>
<ser:StaffProfilesUploadRequest ac="YY">
<ser:updateRecord>
<ser:employee ptc="ZEA" lastname="Test" firstname="emp" middlename="midd" salutation="MR" title="Dr." gender="M" laborGroup="pilot" dob="1990-01-01">
<bos:employment eID="uploadTest" doj="2000-01-01" />
<bos:accounting costCenter="123" />
<bos:contact emailAddress="[email protected]" phone1="1234" phone2="23456" mobileNumber="545454"/>
<bos:entitled-person ptc="ZSP" lastname="test" firstname="entit" middlename="spouse" salutation="MR" dob="1995-01-01" externalPersonID="2" />
<bos:employment-status startDate="2000-01-01" status="retired"/>
</ser:employee>
</ser:updateRecord>
</ser:StaffProfilesUploadRequest>
</soapenv:Body>
</soapenv:Envelope>
Through trial and error, I have come up with the following C# code, that is at least contacting the API, but is returning a "500 internal server error"
. It is also using XML tailored to my specific needs.
HttpWebRequest request = (HttpWebRequest)HttpWebRequest.Create("https://integration.myidtravel.com/services/Gateway_V2");
request.Method = "POST";
request.ContentType = "text/xml;charset=\"utf-8\"";
request.Accept = "text/xml, application/xhtml+xml, */*";
var cert = new X509Certificate2(@"C:\client.pfx", "password");
request.ClientCertificates.Add(cert);
XmlDocument xml = new XmlDocument();
xml.LoadXml(
@"<soapenv:Envelope xmlns:soapenv='http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/' xmlns:ser='http://service.login.myidtravel.com' xmlns:bos='http://bos.login.myidtravel.com'>
<soapenv:Header>
</soapenv:Header>
<soapenv:Body>
<ser:StaffProfilesUploadRequest ac='XX'>
<ser:updateRecord>
<ser:employee ptc='ZEA' lastname='Wallace' firstname='Kirby' middlename='L.' dob='1999-01-01'>
<bos:employment eID='123456'/>
</ser:employee>
</ser:updateRecord>
</ser:StaffProfilesUploadRequest>
</soapenv:Body>
</soapenv:Envelope>"
);
using (Stream stream = request.GetRequestStream()) {
xml.Save(stream);
}
using (StreamReader reader = new StreamReader(request.GetResponse().GetResponseStream())) { // <--- ERROR HERE
string response = reader.ReadToEnd();
}
By the time the error is thrown on request.GetReponse()
, the cert
is loaded and appears to be a valid X509 cert. cert.Thumbprint, cert.PrivateKey
, cert.PublicKey
, cert.NotBefore
, and cert.NotAfter
(and all other properties) seem to have valid values in them.
But the API is returning 500 Internal Server Error
upon .GetResponse()
.
What steps am I missing, or what else do I need to do?
SoapUi
orPostman
software. With these tools you can test all the endpoints. Then convert your requests into c#, there's also tools to generate c# models for Soap Endpoints.wsdl.exe
,svcutil.exe
. And you can you add a soap service directly in Visual studio if you right click the project: "Add->Service Reference" then point to a WSDL.